The Strategies
How
Real Simple made this family’s movie-and-music center ready for its close-up.
1. Use The Right Stuff: Real Simple removed Ann and Scott’s CDs and DVDs from their plastic cases. CDs, categorized by genre, are now contained in canvas binders (shown). DVDs and cover art, slipped into dust- and scratch-resistant see-through sleeves that stand vertically in plastic bases, can be flipped through (in alphabetical order, under Comedy, Drama, Romance, etc.), à la Blockbuster. (The plastic cases were recycled; visit
www.greendisk.com for more info.) A chalkboard mounted to the back of a cupboard door allows the kids to take turns designating the weekly movie.
2. Call in Inspector Gadget: The family transferred cassettes to CDs, and VHS tapes to DVDs. (For cassettes, visit
www.audiomover.com; $10 for each transfer. For VHS tapes wedding videos, say check out
www.vhs-to-dvd.com; $18 for each transfer. Or invest in a VHS-to-DVD recorder; from $150 at most big-box electronics stores.) Meanwhile, Scott swapped his massive floor speakers for a pair of white bookshelf speakers, which blend in with the entertainment center. (Instead of tossing electronics, post them on
www.freecycle.org, where you can give and get items for free.)
3. Install The Great Divide: Real Simple transformed the three lower cupboards into distinct zones: board and video games on the left, DVD player and movies in the middle, and CD player and music on the right.
4. Minimize Space Invaders: An upper shelf, once crammed with liquor bottles, contains a single tray of the brands the couple serve most frequently.
5. Employ containers To Have and to Hold: Fabric-covered boxes are now home to Ann’s loose photos. Magazine files organize her favorite gardening, cooking, and decorating titles, plus Scott’s stash of
National Geographics.